The puzzling, fascinating surface of Jupiter’s icy moon Europa looms large in
this newly-reprocessed color view, made from images taken by NASA's Galileo
spacecraft in the late 1990s. This is the color view of Europa from Galileo that
shows the largest portion of the moon's surface at the highest resolution.
The view was previously released as a mosaic with lower resolution and
strongly enhanced color
. To
create this new version, the images were assembled into a realistic color view
of the surface that approximates how Europa would appear to the human eye.
The scene shows the stunning diversity of Europa’s surface geology. Long,
linear cracks and ridges crisscross the surface, interrupted by regions of
disrupted terrain where the surface ice crust has been broken up and re-frozen
into new patterns.
Color variations across the surface are associated with differences in
geologic feature type and location. For example, areas that appear blue or white
contain relatively pure water ice, while reddish and brownish areas include
non-ice components in higher concentrations. The polar regions, visible at the
left and right of this view, are noticeably bluer than the more equatorial
latitudes, which look more white. This color variation is thought to be due to
differences in ice grain size in the two locations.
Images taken through near-infrared, green and violet filters have been
combined to produce this view. The images have been corrected for light
scattered outside of the image, to provide a color correction that is calibrated
by wavelength. Gaps in the images have been filled with simulated color based on
the color of nearby surface areas with similar terrain types.
This global color view consists of images acquired by the Galileo Solid-State
Imaging (SSI) experiment on the spacecraft's first and fourteenth orbits through
the Jupiter system, in 1995 and 1998, respectively. Image scale is 1 mile (1.6
kilometers) per pixel. North on Europa is at right.
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